Courtesy The Spaces
This is the world's longest and tallest tunnel slide.
Courtesy The Spaces
It weaves around the 115 meter-tall (377 ft) Orbit Tower in London.
Courtesy The Spaces
The Orbit Tower was conceived by Anish Kapoor for the 2012 Olympics.
BEN STANSALL/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
The slide was added this year by artist Carsten Höller.
getty images
"Now that the two artworks will be intertwined with each other, I see it as one of these double situations that I am so interested in," says Höller, pictured above with Anish Kapoor.
BEN STANSALL/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
At 178 m-long (584 ft), it is the longest and tallest tunnel slide in the world.
Rob Stothard/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images
The Orbit Tower slide is made up of 30 sections and feature 12 turns.
Rob Stothard/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images
It has a top speed of 15 miles per hour
Rob Stothard/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images
And takes approximately 40 seconds to ride from top to bottom.
Rob Stothard/Getty Images Europe/Getty Images
It will open to the public on June 24.

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by The Spaces, a digital publication exploring new ways to live and work.

Story highlights

London's ArcelorMittal Orbit Tower 115 meter-tall (377 ft) tall

It opens to the public on June 24, 2016

CNN  — 

Thrill seekers in England have a new place to get an adrenaline rush with the world’s tallest and longest tunnel slide opening to the public at London’s ArcelorMittal Orbit Tower on June 24.

Artist Carsten Höller – developing on an initial proposal by Bblur Architecture – has designed the 178 m-long (584 ft) helter skelter slide. It’s the latest intervention to the 115 meter-tall (377 ft) Orbit, conceived by Anish Kapoor for the 2012 Olympics, following an abseiling attraction completed last year.

“Since 1999, I have built a number of slides, both free-standing and attached to buildings, but never onto another artwork as in this case,” says Höller, who installed a pair of spiraling slides at the Hayward Gallery for an exhibition last summer.

“Now that the two artworks will be intertwined with each other, I see it as one of these double situations that I am so interested in.”

The Orbit Tower slide will be made up of 30 sections – 12 of which are now complete – and feature 12 turns, including a tight corkscrew twist. It starts at a height of 74 meters and has a top speed of 15 miles per hour, taking 40 seconds to go down.

Tickets for the attraction cost £15 ($22) and include access to the Orbit’s viewing platform.

London isn’t the only city expecting a helter skelter either, with plans afoot for a glass slide 1,000 ft up Downtown LA’s US Bank Tower.

Head to The Spaces for more architectural wonders from around the world.